From: Adam Parachin <aparachi@uwo.ca>
To: obligations@uwo.ca
Date: 01/08/2014 18:09:28 UTC
Subject: Re: ODG: Unconditional Bequest Struck on the Basis of Public Policy

I share Stephen's suspicion that an NB court would indeed be likely to recognize the National Alliance as a foreign entity possessing the capacity to enforce a debt obligation, or other like proceeding, in an NB court.  This complicates the suggestion that McCorkill is ultimately concerned not with the public policy limits of testamentary freedom but rather with the application of public policy in private international law.  
 
One might say in reply that a bequest is readily distinguishable from a debt proceeding.  As a donative transfer, the bequest does more than any other kind of transaction or proceeding to economically enable the nefarious pursuits of the National Alliance.  But the difference here is merely one of degree.  It is not a difference in kind.  It is therefore not obvious why the repugnant activities of the National Alliance would be a controlling consideration in one context but not the other, unless, of course, what is ultimately driving the analysis in McCorkill is a concern over policing the limits of testamentary freedom (which is how McCorkill was expressly reasoned).  This takes us back to the issues I previously raised about McCorkill having potentially expanded the doctrine of public policy to now include a judicial discretion to strike unconditional bequests to unpalatable beneficiaries.
 
What if the beneficiary in McCorkill was not a foreign corporation but rather a foreign individual?  Would principles of private international law still allow the court to disregard the individual as a legal person with capacity to receive an NB bequest due to his or her racist tendencies?  If so, then the court's insistence in McCorkill that bequests to individuals are categorically distinct from bequests to corporations comes under attack.  If not, then we are left with a doctrine allowing bequests to racist individuals but not to racist corporations.  If this is the law, then foreign racists are well-advised to not incorporate and/or testators with racist sympathies are well-advised to leave their estates to the directing minds of the National Alliance rather than to the National Alliance itself.  There is something not particularly satisfying about either outcome.
 
How will future courts deal with McCorkill?  The cases in this area of law reveal a certain willingness of late on the part of courts to give large and liberal interpretations to precedents limiting testamentary freedom on the basis of public policy.  In the not too distant past, the Ontario Court of Appeal in Canada Trust Co. v. Ontario Human Rights Commission [1990] O.J. No. 615 struck the shockingly bigoted provisions of a charitable trust on the basis of public policy, expressly noting in paragraph 100 that that case "does not affect private, family trusts."  A few years later, the very same court in Fox v. Fox Estate [1996] O.J. No. 375 cited Canada Trust Co. (paragraph 16) in the context of - of all things - a discriminatory exercise of a power of appointment under a private family trust. 
 
 
On 08/01/14, Stephen Pitel <spitel@uwo.ca> wrote:
--
Adam Parachin
Associate Professor
Faculty of Law
University of Western Ontario
(519) 661-2111 Ext. 81445